Leicester City owners to be probed for non-payment of taxes after a Thai court accepts lawsuit against them

Bangkok: A Thai anti-corruption court on Monday accepted a lawsuit accusing duty-free giant King Power, the company that owns Leicester City Football Club, of owing the state $420 million in unpaid taxes.

The case is a rare attack on an ultra-rich firm run by one of the kingdom’s best-connected billionaires.

Representational image. AFP

The suit, filed by an anti-graft official, accuses King Power executives of colluding with airport authorities to pay only three percent of the company’s annual revenue instead of the contracted 15 percent.

The plaintiff, Charnchai Issarasenanark, said the graft caused the state 14 billion baht ($420 million) in damages.

“The court agreed to hear the case,” an official from Bangkok’s Corruption court told reporters.

King Power, whose lawyer declined to comment, has previously denied any wrongdoing and filed a number of defamation lawsuits against Charnchai.

The progress of the case is a rare setback for the company’s founder Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha.

Starting with a single shop in Bangkok in 1989, Vichai has built an estimated fortune of $2.9 billion through his duty-free empire.

The firm now has a near-monopoly on duty-free sales in Thailand’s main airports, plus a satellite mall in Bangkok favoured by Chinese tourists.

Vichai’s reputation for canny decision-making surged after the 2016 English Premier League championship win by minnows Leicester City, which his family bought for an estimated $58 million in 2010.

The 60-year-old has also carefully navigated Thailand’s treacherous political waters of recent years, frequently rubbing shoulders with the elite.